EUGENE -- Close to 1,700 high school,
college and university, and post-collegiate competitors will converge on
Hayward Field this weekend to take part in the Oregon Relays presented by the
Oregon Community Credit Union Friday and Saturday.
Reserved seats for the
two-day meet are $9 per day, while general admission tickets are $6 daily for
adults and $4 for children, 17 years and younger.
Friday only, Bi-Mart is
sponsoring a 2-for-1 ticket promotion that allows spectators to purchase two
reserved seats for only $9 when accompanied by a Bi-Mart card.
The Bowerman Building ticket window will open at 12:30 p.m. Friday, with access into Hayward Field available
beginning at 1
p.m. Tickets Saturday can be
purchased beginning at 8:30 a.m., with gates opening at 9 a.m.
Friday’s schedule will get
underway with a series of B section events beginning at 1:15 p.m. However the primary sections of Friday’s schedule
will begin with field events at 4 p.m.,
followed by running events at 4:40 p.m.
Saturday’s schedule will
commence at 10
a.m., with the High
Performance session of running events beginning at 4:25 p.m.
Men and women representing as
many as 18 NCAA Division I programs are expected to compete, including teams
from Arizona State, Central Michigan, Colorado, Georgia, Oklahoma, Oregon,
Oregon State, Portland, Portland State, Washington, Wichita State and
Wisconsin. They will be joined by competitors from such schools as Lane
Community College, Oregon Tech, Pacific, Southern Oregon, Western
Oregon and Willamette, in addition to approximately 35 Oregon high schools and another five from the state of Washington.
The Ducks’ turn their
attention away from a team-scoring emphasis and begin a three-week run geared
towards preparations for next month’s Pacific-10 Conference Championships.
The Oregon men made inroads towards improving their stock on the
national front following last week’s 94-69 dual-meet win over previously
third-ranked UCLA. The victory vaulted the Ducks to 19th in the
country as the men entertain the likes of athletes representing eighth-ranked Arizona State, No. 16 Colorado, 23rd-ranked Wisconsin and 25th-rated Georgia.
The women maintained their
previous ranking of 14th in the country and will face challenges from
competitors from the No. 2-ranked Sun Devils.
The Ducks are led by
sophomore Ashton Easton, who currently ranks fourth in the country in the
decathlon (7,792 points). The Bend standout is expected to compete in no fewer than four
events during the weekend. In addition, sophomore A.J. Acosta, who is ranked 25th
nationally in the 5,000 meters (13:57.81), is entered in Friday’s Bill
McChesney Jr. Memorial 5,000 as well as Saturday’s Invitational Mile Run. He
will be joined in the former event by redshirt freshman Danny Mercado, who is
ranked 19th in the country in the 10,000 meters (29:04.24).
Sophomore Andrew Wheating would join Acosta in the mile run after ranking ninth
in the country (3rd in the Pac-10) in the 800 meters (1:48.83).
The program’s men’s field
events are led by a trio of hammer throwers who all rank among the top 46 in
the country as well as the top seven in the Pac-10. Senior Colin Veldman stands
ninth in the country (219-6) as the conference runner-up, while freshman Jordan
Stray is 13th nationally (215-8) and third in the league, and junior
Steven Johnson is seventh in the Pac-10 (198-10).
Oregon junior Mike Simmons heads a javelin corps as the
conference’s fourth-best thrower ranks 13th in the country (226-7).
On the Oregon women’s side, junior Rachel Yurkovich heads the field
in the javelin as the Pac-10 leader ranks second in the country (183-11). The
school record-holder (new implement) will look to hold off former Duck Sarah
Malone, who ranks second on the school’s all-time list in the event.
After posting the school’s
top 5,000-meter mark in 20 years, sophomore Nicole Blood will step down to the
1,500 Friday night. Blood ranks 17th in the country in the event
(4:20.86) as well as third in the country at 5,000 meters (15:43.82).
Conversely, freshman Alex Kosinski is slated to run her first 5,000 of her
career after ranking 11th in the country in the 1,500 meters
(4:19.88).
Expected to make her
long-awaited Hayward Field debut is freshman pole vaulter Melissa Gergel. The Glenwood,
Ill., standout finished in a three-way tie for eighth
place in this year’s NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships (13-5.25),
with her personal-best 13-7 landing her third on the women’s all-time indoor
list.
Canadian freshman Brianne
Theisen will continue working on different aspects that will aid her run in the
heptathlon at the conference meet, as the nation’s fifth-best standout in the
event (5,575) and league runner-up is being counted on to compete in a minimum
of three events. She will be joined in the long jump by freshman Jamesha
Youngblood, who ranks 26th in the country (41-11.25) in the triple
jump.
Youngblood also is entered in
sections of the 400 meters as well as the 400 hurdles.
Sophomore Keshia Baker, who is rated 19th
in the country (53.62) and second in the conference in the 400, will run the
200 meters this weekend after ranking 10th in the Pac-10 (24.31).